Headlands Center for the Arts is pleased to announce the artists and collaboratives who have been awarded into its renowned Artist in Residence program. The creative practitioners in this year’s lineup represent 13 countries, 10 states, and a multitude of practices that will come together at Headlands with the direct support of fully sponsored, live-in residencies designed to sustain their artistic processes.

Artist Indira Allegra's digital weaving project "Blackout" shows the power of censorship encoded in the twill of police uniforms, when woven together with statements by families who have lost loved ones to police violence.

From an evening of conversations between the artists of Take This Hammer: Art + Media Activism from the Bay Area, an exhibition that presents the work of Bay Area artists, activists, and technologists originating some of today's most powerful social movements impacting racial justice, police brutality, immigration, displacement, and war.

The New Asterisk Magazine editor Dorothy Santos explores female responses to a culture of surveillance with sousveillance ('Sous' is French for 'below'). She and Indira discuss - Sophie Calle's "The Address Book" and privacy in the social media age.

Nia King of the anthology "Queer and Trans Artists of Color" interviews Indira Allegra on her exploration of violence in her video and textile work and on the development of a disability justice framework